Friday, September 22, 2023

Texas, Florida, and Missouri are book banning leaders of the pack

 

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The 2022-23 school year has been marked to date by an escalation of book bans and censorship in classrooms and school libraries across the United States. PEN America recorded more book bans during the fall 2022 semester than in each of the prior two semesters. This school year also saw the effects of new state laws that censor ideas and materials in public schools, an extension of the book banning movement initiated in 2021 by local citizens and advocacy groups. Broad efforts to label certain books “harmful” and “explicit” are expanding the type of content suppressed in schools. 
Again, and again, the movement to ban books is driven by a vocal minority demanding censorship. At the same time, a 2022 poll found that over 70% of parents oppose book banning. Yet the bans continue. Many public school districts find themselves in a bind. They face threats and political pressure, along with parental fears and anxieties surrounding the books on their school shelves. School Boards, administrators, teachers, and librarians are told in some cases to “err on the side of caution” in the books they make available. Too often, they do just that.  [emphasis added]

Related posts:
Tender Sensibilities:  American Enterprise Institute clown freaks out over use of the word 'penis' in a memoir!  (9/13/2023)
What's the matter with Iowa?  GOP hypocrisy and Kimmi the Clown's crackpot education policies.  (8/10/2023)

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